Mad props to you if you actually do storm chasing.
When some people find out you're a storm chaser, they say, "That's a cool job!" But it's a job for very few chasers. Only scientists and a few photographers and tour operators can make a living chasing storms. Some chasers sell some video or photographs to help pay for the hobby, which can be very expensive after chasers pay for gasoline, car maintenance, hotels, food, Internet connections, data-gathering equipment and so on. Yes, there's a lot of gasoline involved, and that's because a storm chaser can cover hundreds of miles a day, or three or four thousand miles a week! Storm chasing rarely involves an easy drive. On one day, a chaser might be in Iowa. The next, in western Nebraska. The next, in the Texas panhandle. And there is no guarantee of seeing anything. Many hours of driving can result in nothing but a blue sky or a few little rain showers. A tornado is a rare event and may appear in only one of every five or ten chases, unless it's a truly extraordinary day. And along the way, there are cheap hotels and bad convenience-store food.
Thumbs up for this.. I look forward to seeing some great storm shots.